Let the Euro die and the bull market resume

I just snuck out of a bunch of fascinating meetings with the Dow Jones folks to address the markets and the latest “the Euro still exists!” relief rally.

I’ve been saying for weeks that we should ignore Greece because it doesn’t matter and that any and all Greece-related selling was a great buying opportunity. I pointed out how the market cap of just one little company in this country (Apple) is larger than the entire GDP of Greece. I’ve pointed out that for decades people have repeatedly sounded the alarm about various other countries’ collapse and how they are supposed to doom our own markets and economy. And indeed, by far the number one response to such statements is:

“It’s not about Greece, it’s about the possibility of contagion and whether or not the Euro can survive at all.”

And my rebuttal to that is quite simple:

I don’t care one iota about the existence of the euro when it comes to my stock market analysis.

Let’s not just listen to these same reporters, pundits and economists who missed predicting the entire credit crisis and now warn us about why the Euro’s supposedly so important to our markets and instead look at some history, people.

The Euro officially came into existence for Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Portugal and Spain on January 1, 1999 when each and every one of those countries adopted the Euro as their official currency. The DJIA was at 9184 or so on January 1, 1999.

The DJIA was also at 9184 as recently as August 2009. So a full ten years after the Euro had started, our own stock market was flat. Even now, in June 2011, with the DJIA at 12,200 or so, the annualized return for our stock market since the Euro started is less than 2%:

In other words, the stock market’s returns since the founding of the euro hasn’t even matched inflation. And you want me to freak out that the Euro might go away if the banks who’ve been lending trillions of Euros to these governments might have to recognize some losses and that such recognition of losses would mean the demise of the Euro? Bring it on!

Heck, you know that the DJIA was up 20% per year for the five years heading into the initiation of the Euro? The markets gave more than 10% annualized returns for the decade before the Euro started. And in the decade since, the markets have been roiled and rangebound. In the first five years after the Euro started, the markets went straight DOWN. Not up. Look for yourself:

Of course, now you guys are going to leave comments about how there were all these other factors that were affecting our stock markets — the real estate bubble and the credit crisis and the bailouts and so on. Exactly my point! Did the Euro matter to your portfolio? Will its demise matter to your portfolio?

Will Apple sell fewer iPads in 2013 if Poland, Slovenia, Greece and Spain all leave the Euro and go back to using their own currencies? No!

Will earnings in the huge move from cell phones to smartphones and the huge economic boom for companies selling into that move suddenly reverse itself if Germany, France and Austria are left using the Euro and to bail out their own banks instead of depending on Greek taxpayers’ to take all the hit for the fraudulent accounting that the government there had used for years with Goldman’s help leading into the crisis?

I sure don’t think so. Let the euro die — I’ll be a buyer of any future market sell-offs over such fears as they give us the opportunity to make trades like loading up on Riverbed calls back when it got caught in this most recent Euro-death-panic-sell-off when it was at $32 a share just two weeks ago.

I’m heading back into these meetings and other than the brand new name I started buying today here on TradingWithCody.com in front of you guys, I’ve done no trades.

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